The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 14, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 18, 1955 Page: 4 of 6
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i 1HE C't'KRO RECORD. Tuesday. January IS. 1955
|
i-i
V
(Eurro Afford
1 tn)1894
pUNatur
Established In/1894
Each Afternoon Excepr"»aturdax. and Sunday Morning.
By THE CUERO PUBLISHING CO., Inc.
Ill E. Main. Cuero, Texas
Entered tn the post office at Cuero, Texas, as second class mattei
_Under Act of Congress March 3. 1897.
Member
Texas Press Association
South Texas Press Association
Southern Newspaper Publishers Association
POLLIWOGS
By Pollt nnatMus
MRS. J. C. HOWERTON
JACK HOWERTON ____
HARRY C. PUTMAN _____
WAYNE WINTERS ..........
R. KENNETH TOWERY
......._.......................... President
.... Vice-President & Publisher
... Ass’t Publisher & Advt. Mgr
............ Business Manager
..................... Managing Editor
National Advertising Representatives
Texas Dailv Press League. Inc.. Tetfas Bank Bldg., Dallas, Texas;
«f) EL 42nd St., New York Citv: 360 N. Michigan Ave.. Chicago; 708
Chestnut St.. St. Louis: 1330 Wilshire Blvd.. Los Angeles: Rialto Bldg |« hardsome new Olds
San Francisco; 1763 Penobscot Bldg. Detroit; Ave Juarer 127. Mexico; leave it out in the weather all night
City. D. F. _
Klecka Drug planning a clever
! advertising message which all baby
; lovers will read with interest.
* • *
Homer ard Bess Blanton back to
1 Granger on business. Expect to
I be gone about four days.
* * *
; Johnnie Cannon celebrating a
birthday today. Congratulations.
» * *
Estelle and Earl Evers sporting
had to
CRASH HELMET
DAILY CROSSWORD
Subscription Rates
*Home Delivered by carrier. Daily and Sunday: One year $10.00. six
months $5.50, three months $2.75, one month $1.00. By mail in DeWitt
Lavaca, Jackson. Victoria, Karnes ar.d Goliad Counties. One year
97.50. six months $4.00, one month .75 By mall elsewhere in Texas:
One year $9.00, aix months $4.75, one month .85. By mail Outside o(
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Semi-Weekly Edition by Mail only ui DeWitt. Lavaca, Jackson, Victoria.
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Elsawhere one year $4.00 six months $2 50.
Official Organ of the City of Cuero and County ofDeWitt.
TELEPHONE 5-S131
Preview
Perhaps because the Merry Yule is so recently behind us,
too big to get in garage.
* * *
Murray Carte wearing goodlook-
ing silver cuff-links, miniature Tex-
as maps with a diamond for the
location of Cuero.
* * *
W. O. White with his head in a
bunch of figures as he works on
inventories
* * *
Ellen Farmer setting out a sec-
ond batch of strawberry plants, and
hoping that her orchid tree which
is as tall as the house wgn't freeze
this winter.
* * •
Mrs. C. B. Cotton getting over a
mighty bad cold which she had
been petting several days.
OllsT
IN(A& l
• '
or because of the gushy reports on bipartisan harmony,
charity and amity that have exuded from most Washington
typewriters for a fornlght or so, the progress of our bowing
President and his Senate-House-escort committee down the
center aisle of the House chamber in the Capitol reminded
us of jolly Saint Nicholas and his reindeer setting out on their two together tear things apart, so
annual visit of cheer. i one has W come ,0 town while the
And, sure enough, when the bag
trum before the joint session of Congress, there appeared to
Jess MeKinzie taking rate of a
pretty six-months old Boston hull
pup at the Victory Laur.dry. He
says they have another, but the
k&m
fa ■§!
M
Wm$$f iSi
raj: ]
W-
r
vM
f|
fS :
t
Ifelia
SMv,.
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-r vii * i'il
J •• J • •
.*,» -r\
\\ *.
Ml /7x , ‘H :W
Wt
5$$‘i
•v
ACROSS
I. Mix
5. Buddhist
dialect
9. River (It.)
10. Shake-
speare's
river
11. Quen.-h,
as thirst
12. Cleanse
of soap
14. Male cat
15. Harass
16. Hires
19. Sun god
20. Plural
pronoun
21. To be
in debt
22. Suits
24. Put on
25. Fuel
26. Stupid
person
I slang i
28 Part of
"to be"
29. Public notice
31. Siberian
gulf
32. A prisoner
34. Star in
constella-
tion Aquila
37. Male adult
38. Rows
39. Thrashes
41. Courage
42. Seaweed
43. Finishes
44. Coffin
frame
DOWN
1. She was
given the
head of John
the Baptist
2. A long walk
3. Writing
fluid
4 Spawn
of fish
5. Coins
(Turk. I
6. Greedy
7. Yearn
8. Inset
11. Boil slowly
13. Epochs
15. Secondary
17. Aquatic
bird
18. Possess
22. Quick
23. Part of
"to be"
24. Note of
the scale
25. Breach
26. The
sign
Cap-
ricorn
27. Place
under
obli-
gation
28 Conflict’
29. The
incar-
nation
of a
god (Hindu)
i. Lairs
32. Boxes for
sacred uten-
sils (Class.
Antiq.)
Inlirilif'i Amntr
33. Semblance
35. Gull-likc
bird
36. Dry
39. Title giiui
to founder
of Babism
40. High priest
n
i
2.
5
4
I
s
b
7
8
I
i
9
1
IO
i
it
i
il
13
P
15
ib-
17
18
n
§
14
~
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11
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24
25
at
at
M
3o
_
is
3t
55
Ta“
it
.
n
TT”
46“
39
40
TT
4t“
ii
__
i-(*
. .. . ■ other stays at home,
vas opened on the ros- « - *
Home Hint
except, possibly, the Alas- LEM MATS
for Today PROB-
- At a loss to knrivv
FACTOGRAPHS
The more than four million men presently on our de- j rolTbath^rt'uVi ■h'yoti wrTh °or
Fossil
ameter.
pe something for everybody
kans.
fen.se rolls are to be reduced in “certain categories”, increas- j dinarily, with colored clothes? it
*d in others, notably air. There will be a speed up of the con- ! is suggested that you soak it for a
-itinental defense set-up, a build-up of ready reserve forces, an fe'v hours in a lart-e Pan in a strong, Malathion
Increase in “the attractions of a military career” to encourage
reenlistment and a further extension of the Selective Service
Act since “our standing forces must remain much larger than
voluntary methods can sustain".
In this State of the Nation address, President Eisenhow-
er reminded us that expenditures proposed in the Truman
budget of January 1953 were cut ten billions, the actual
spending being six-and-a-half billions below the previous
year and stated that the Government will spend four-and-a-
half billions less in the current fiscal year than in that end-
ed last June 30. He also reminded the Congress, and the
oysters, 30 inches
have been found
in di- and Florida boast comparable von- Texas
along centrations. Texas
17VV
32.
a white
a yellow
hybrid and
hybrid. Seed
the lower Rio Grande valley.
* * *
.., ____________ van he used safely on
I solution of soapsuds to which you’ve dogs lo control fleas. A five-tenths
! added a half cup of ammonia.^ percent spray or four percent dust
j Change the water and soapsuds | give the longest control. A two and
J until most of the embedded grit is one-half percent spray Or a four-
lout, before placing in your washer percent dust will get the pests in
1 with other things.
10 and 20 Years Ago
From Record Files.
garages or other infested spots.
Free-choice feeding of phenothia-
zine may some day help control
cattle grubs but several problems
I regarding its use must first he
Jan. 18. 1945 solved. Cattle don't like its taste
City Attorney David M. Stiles an(j a practical way to feed the
was scheduled to leave for Wash- product has not yet been found,
ington to confer with officials
* * * !for planting in 1955 will be avail-
More than a million earthquakes aWo through established seed
occur in the world each year, but dealeis.
only a fraction are recorded. j * * *
* * * | Management plays a big role
January 28 is an important date in the success of small grains and
for l ice producers. On that day \ annual clover for winter graz-
thoy will vote in a referendum to ing. Plants should be at least
determine whether or not market- six inches high before they are
ing quotas will be in effect for the grazed. Rotation grazing is
1955 rice crop. All eligible growers‘strongly recommended,
are urged to vote. * * »
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE—Here’s how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this example A is um4
for the three L's, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters. *po»*
trophies, the length and formation of .the words are all hint*
Each day the code letters are different.
A Cryptogram Quotation
PAKHLAK FNVE NWMA ENA J A X A T *1
AJLHJC RDHCNE W R RGEGTA LVOK
U V O P T H J C—U H D E W J.
Yesterday’s Cryptoquote: OUR GOD AND SOLDIER WB
ALIKE ADORE, WHEN AT THE BRINK OF RUIN. NOT BE*
FORE -QUARLES.
Tex-
The largest antlered creature on
weigh 1.800 pounds, stand nearly j
County agents in 218
as . counties assisted 13.246
operators with range man- ..... ,, ,
agement problems during 1954 ^h< feel hlSh at *he shoulders,
More than 43.000 persons attended and carry antlers six feet across,
meetings and field days relating to 'he National Geographic Society
earth, an Alaskan bull moose, may
00 poi
feet high
on • * •
radio and TV audience at large, that “we had a large tax cut”.the deal "hereby Cuero was to ac- The Arctic tern flies farther
last vear. Excise and corporation income taxes must be con- quire bl)lldmss owned b>' 1he >n its migration than any other range management problems. These sa>s-
tin,fed their present rates, however, but he hoped .ha, MaTSt ^ Id, as
lower expenditures and higher income might make redUC- Wilburn Worthington of Cuero met1 California has more different in the counties. I far as 100 miles off the Maine
tions possible next year overseas in fiance There was flowering plants than any other * * * i shore, never come to land except
Uncle Sam will remain a partner, with state and local * state Of some 30.000 in the entire. Two new corn hybrids have been to nest. They avoid the mainland
*virs- unarios r ronese orroreo l nitea States, about a sixth are released by the Texas Agru ultur- bounti'C their burrows are vulner-
governments and private citizens in power development. The Cuero women a recipe showing how found in California. Only Texas at Experiment Station. They are able ' predatory animals.
1956 budget Includes appropriations to start six new reelama-jt0 u,illze w aste fat
tion and 30 new Corps of Engineers projects.
for making|
soap Pfe. Glenn Wasserman.i
j son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman IVass-i
Highways needs, as indicated by the Conference of Gov-1 erman of Cuero, was reported to
ernors in response to the President’s suggested 50 billion dol- have been wounded in action in
lar ten-year program, and as further analyzed by the Presl- nrr4"1< t
dent’s Special Advisory Committee will be the subject of one ,jan 1K ,!l3%
of the numerous special messages to come. We can look to Services for John Wallis were
the Government to build 35,000 new public housing units, to hcld herp A “ro,1P of. Cuero
Improve foreign trade, farm prices, schools, health services. a ,houcr fn]. Mrs Jjlton C;isftli the
eocial security, arts and cultural activities: to establish a 90 former Marie Riggs , Mrs. G.
cents-an-hour minimum wage and boost the pay of Feder- '" - Compton and little daughter, Jo
»1 workers including Congre.ssmen. I a I'af ^oTl la s accord "to a.^r'
It should be remembered, of course, that all this can Rueekert of Cuero Mrs. Edith
only come to pass through the blessing of Congress—a Demo-1 Woodus who was injured in
eratle Congress. But there i-s much to suggest that the
Democrats themselves could hardly have outlined a program dames A. w
more to their liking.
s h •
*i
ms*
¥
Bi ‘Doctors CROSSROADS
ELIZABETH SEIFERT 1
m
ra
, K.ny I’eal ii ea ^..ndwat*
Snake Oil
A San Francisco man reports that he was bitten by a
snake while mixing up a batch of liniment from an old Chi-
nese recelpe. The recipe called for one rattle-snake soaked
In a jug of whiskey. Apparently the man didn’t keep the cork
on the Jug long enough for when he opened it he found the
snake Inebriated but very much alive.
It is the recipe that intrigues us. Were the ancient Chi-
nese who first recorded it having a bit of fun? Were they
really trying to make liniment or were they more concern-
ed with the contents of the jug taken internally? Maybe the
formula works but it sounds more I'1’0 * readv-mixod night-
mare.
What about the snake that bit the liniment-maker?
We have all heard of the fellow who sees snakes after hr has
r "r Indulged. What of a snake that gets a drop too much
p- * wakes tin seeing people’' Want to hPt the unke goes
on the wagon’
A’ latest Report the stock market was rallying from a
f~”r hutjon doMar slump generally blamed on the Federal Re-
serve Board’s boost of margin requirements from 50 to 60
percent. Considering the millions of investors who are 100
p'rcent owners of their storks, the Board's action was emint-
lv correct when soaring prices reached and even passed 1929
levels. Complainers have short memories.
a car
wreck at Waco, was doing as well
as could he exported . Mrs-
Bourke, Hadley Ed-
gar, Joe Edgar, Jr., Seth Bell and
Clyde Willingham were San Antonio
visitors.......Cambell Lott of Goliad
was in town . Ed Mueller and
his faithful "Old Grey’’ had com-
pleted 25 years service delivering;
mail for folks living in the south-
ern portion of the city He was
honored with an oyster supper
following his last run for Uncle
Sam.
A rumor is like plumbing As soon as it starts to leak, a
flood may be In prospect.
The surest way to lose an argument is to take part in it
!n the first place.
SVSul'M.'
Dr Fred Beiet Had come from SI
Louis lo Uie rural community of Jen-
nings. Missouri, where lie m red io find
peace In ihe quiet countryside, And he
had found It and contentment, too
senrlns as the tittle town s only physi-
cian. He was nappy in an old-fashioned
houss witdi Katie, his wile, an unpre-
tentious young matron, who knew very
well that many a woman cast a covet-
ous eye upon ner Fred. Women for in-
stance. like wealthy, glamorous Mrs.
Linda Kyle, who had interested the
doctor in her varied charity causes
Now. Linda a Immediate concern Is the
Nlenaber family, kindly German refu-
Keea who seemed lost and frightened In
their new found land.
CHAPTER FOUR
FRED sighed at the conditions
he saw and came back to the wom-
an who still coughed Into the corn-
er of her shawl: he squatted on his
heels and talked to her earnestly.
Finally she lifted her eyes and
spoke breathlessly. Blood flecked
her lower lip.
She had, she told him, coughed
for a long time. First, in the camp
near Munich: it had been better
tor a white since taming to Amer-
ica—but in the winter—and now—
She gestured in despair at hri
swollen body The good Hen God-
frey, she said tcartully, nad not
bargained tor them to have chil-
dren! He did not expect that'
help >ou, much in the same taahion
as Mr. Godtrey wished to help you
But with me, as with mm, there is
a limit to what we can do. Beyonu
that limit, you must help your-
selves.''
The two retugees looked up at
him with patient eyes, blank taces
They were listening, but it was
impossible to tell il his message
reached them.
"Mr. GovUrey," said Dr. Beier,
talking clearly, slowly, as. one
would talk to children rather than
lo grown people. "Mr. Godfrey is
a good man. He is ousy, but he is
good. His goodness reached out lo
that camp—near Munich, did you
say?—and it brought you across
the ocean, across this great coun
try. here to tins ranch. He estab-
lished you in this place with tood
and money and warmth and shei-
la. That ne did tor you, and it
was a great deal.
"So!” Fred was saying Now, it
is your turn. Now it is you who
owe something, some effort, to
your beneiuelor, and to the lane!
winch has made a place lor you.
He was rewarded by a taint show
ol bewilderment in Richard Nrcn-
aber s eyes.
W hy," h ied asked the nus- (enough tui Mr. Godiic>
P°U '
lure to
; enough toi
tuts plate,
you just
i "Yes:" said hied. "It was
hus-
band, “did you not come tor me
You knew there was a doctor, and
that your wile was ill?"
The man and his wile exchanged
;iaiKcs, but did not answer. Fred "terrible thing. It suhes one. A
nutlered below ms breath. j young plant pul in > a dark cellar
"Don t blame Godtrey too much, will not grow. U you Ute always
come, with nothing in our pockcU,
nothing but our lives, our bodiea
and our strangeness. We came be-
cause kind people gave us a chance
to come, a means by which we
could live in a tree land!’*
Richard Nicnaber and his wife
looked at each other, unbelieving.
"Can this be true?” they asked.
"The Uuktor was once a refugee!"
Fred laughed. “1 not only was
one, 1 still am one. A refugee from
many things. But I have learned
one truth, that the only times 1
have known real trouble, trouble
from W'tiich 1 could not save my-
self, was when 1 pretended to be
w'hat 1 was not, or when 1 pre-
tended that things were not as
they were. Then I was wrong. Al-
ways.
"1 have learned that one must
face the truth, and Uve with iL
So it is with Clara s health. It was
wrong ol you lo live for a year in
this place, knowing that she was
sick, knowing that a doctor was
at hand, and not do anything about
it.”
He shook his finger Into their
faces; ne talked sternly to them.
They were to do differently! They
were not to be at raid! Clara was
to be made comfortable. They were
lo bung; to use the telephone up in the
It is not 1 house, and bring down a rug and
to come some comlortable chairs — and
A bo t e all else, it it vety wrong lot
you lo be alraid Feat i* always a
Fred." Linda urged. "He means
well; ne just doesn't think. He
probably expected these people—
probably ne thinks now —that thev
are living soft nerc in ms nolisc
A lot ol this is their lauit, Fred,
not ms. He shouldn't nave gone t you in the nope lhat you would be
away without establishing them, happy, anu that you would begin
out beyond that
m the snadow ol tear, you cannot
grow strong, or nappy—you -an-
nol do me things Mr. Godfrey ex-
pected ol you when nc Drought you
here. He did not bring \ou nere
only to work tor mm. He orougnt
Give the man
*i<ie berth.
who offerc von something for nothing a
SSL v.ur
DOUBLE CIRCLE NECK-
LINE distinguishes this Her-
bert Sondheim dinner dress < f
silver-colored petal soie (silk
slipper satin t. Allover embroj.
dery is worked with sliver lame
thread and matching paillette*,
pear!*, and brilliants. The neck-
line in back is rer.’.ered with a
bo* and streamers,.__
F'reo smiled ai ner. 'You go
watt in me car, dear," he said
gently. "I'm going to examine '.his
woman, and 1 don.t want you to
see or hoai me ordt *.ng these loiks
about." He accompanied ner to get
ms bag, then went back in the
house and closed me door oenmd
him. Linda sat rubbing Fannie's
soft, pointed ear
"Now!" said Ur doctor when he
had hnishea me examination, 1
want to say things to you both
1 want you to listen, and to believe ;
uve. Betsee* in me. I am ner* to '
a new life tor yourselves in
place. But, because of tear,
are not doing that, and it Is
wrong. '
•//*rr DuklorNienaber broke
in. ms tone resigned, "you do not
know of wtiat you speak. One—"
"Oh. yes, 1 do Know!" said Fred
crisply. Why not? My lather and
mother ar.d I —we, too. were once
splaced persons. We too came as
elugecs to a strange land. That
was, ol course, alter another war,
and perhaps not so terrible a war
—but for ua it was quite bad
eoougto. We caaya, a* you have
fc
above all, they w ere te do what th*
doctor said —
Back on the road in the car with
Linda beside him, she said, "I'm
glad 1 Drought you."
"Yes! The woman is very Ul"
He slowed tor the narrow, high-
waler bridge at Mirandy's gates.
"1 wonder if those people Know
what these arroyos can do in the
spring rains," murmured Linda.
"Those people, eiy dear Linda,~
Fred instructed her, "know all
mis about things which mean trouble
you and disaster. It is good luck which
Is can take tnem Dy surprise.”
Linda turned in the seal to look
at Fred ”1 thought l Knew you
pretty well,” the confessed, "but
j I nad never suspected you of cyni-
cism. But then," she laughed, “I
1 pever guessed, either, that you
were a bossy man."
He chuckled. "You have knows
me in my less protessionai capaci-
ty, deai Linda I am bossy. A doc-
tor nas to De. Or should be. At
least, as 1 view my profession *
IT* B* Oomtmmdj
TVTEW YORK—Met a man in his 68th year
I 1 the World Almanac can be trusted fully l '
other day who was completely satisfied with '
trade at which ^a'd spent his life working. D< .
ever again tell rpe this isn't a town full of genu...a
characters.
Man's name was Boris. Karloff. Somewhere in
the 30s, Mr. and Mrs. America voted him the gc i-
tleman they would like least to meet in a dark
alley. The sober truth, of course, is that he is a
mild soul, intelligent and articulate, only slightly
actory and quite likely would be as fine a baby*
sitter as you could fjnd. It is his cross to bear that
he will go down in theatrical history as the map
with the' reversible eyes, button in his neck, flat
Beris Karloff head and preoccupation with the devouring of chiU
Success formula: dren and small women.
Be lucky. What was so startling, however, was to heaj
him say now, in the twilight of a long career that
began with a stock company In Canada before World War I, that h*
loved acting and always had. In the profession, this is heresy. These
days any actor worth his weekly paycheck is always insisting that
his next play or picture will be his last, after which he'll turn to pro*
ducing or directing. "Acting is for children," they say loftily. "You're
an automaton. The director is the creative genius in the theater.”
By and large, they are right.
• • * •
“I’VE WANTED TO ACT since I was nine," the tanned and soft*
j spoken Boris told me, in a television studio where he was wrapping up
rehearsals for a TV production of his old hit, Arsenic and Old Lacs.
■ "Lord knows why. It is the most brutal, hard, unrewarding Job ]
j know—unrewarding financially, I mean—and certainly It is a pr*«
I carious way of keeping body and soul together."
I put it to him: Why act, then? "You only do it because you hav4
a fire in your belly,” he said. "I've had a fire in my belly for it for a
long, long time. Still there, too."
Mr.’K. has been excited by the stage and excited by the films; now
he is wildly excited by TV. "I love the inevitability of It," he said,
"There's none of this redoing of a scene six times, as in the movies, or
telling yourself, 'Well, I was lousy tonight but I'll do better for to<
morrow night's audience.’
"You get one shot—8 to 9 o’clock, say. The clock is ticking. If you*
head rolls off in a corner at 7:45 . . . well, you'd just better have it
stuck on by 8, and that's all there is to it." I told him Freud would
have diagnosed him as a man who likes to live dangerously. He just
grinned.
• • • •
NOW QUIETLY ENSCONCED in an apartment overlooking Cen-
tral Park in "this most exciting city in the world," Boris Still Is trailed
everywhere by the spectre of the Frankenstein monster. "Actually,"
he said, "I only made three of the films about him There were an-
other half dozen done, but after three I thought all the monster': pos-
sibilities had been explored. But do you know? I still gut a great deal
of publicity when they went on making the films with other actors—
only they got the paychecks. Didn't seem quite fair to me '
He played Arsenic for nearly three years from 1940 on. 19 months
of it right here in New Y'ork, and still thinks it one of the best-written
plays in America’s history. "I love the way the audience finds out for
itself, without being told, that we re all of us dotty in the show," h«
grinned. "Take John Alexander, who played Teddy Roosevelt. No-
body really knows he's off center until, while taking tea, he remarks,
'Personally, I've always enjoyed my talks with Cardinal Gibbons o'
have I met him yet'?"
If young actors would like pearls of w isdom from old Boris. . <
them be satisfied with his formula; "Be lucky." He looked around th«
rehearsal hall. "Look at the young actors here, doing bit parts," h*
said. "They're all good, all competent. However, some of them just
haven't hit it big and pterhaps won't. It's the one business where ym*
just can't create opportunity for yourself. If you’re lucky, it come*
If not. .He sighed. “Me, I’ve been lucky. Very lucky."
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Towery, R. Kenneth. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 14, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 18, 1955, newspaper, January 18, 1955; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth695551/m1/4/: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.